A pro-euthanasia group will harness celebrity power in a fresh campaign urging undecided voters to only support candidates who back assisted dying laws.

A recorded phone message by television personality Andrew Denton will go out to thousands of voters in the Albert Park, Prahran, Bentleigh and Burwood electorates, prompting voters to make voluntary euthanasia a priority at the state election on Saturday.

Voluntary euthanasia laws passed the Victorian Parliament in a conscience vote last year, but supporters still fear a change in government could undermine the laws.

Despite his personal objection to the laws, Opposition Leader Matthew Guy insists that he has no plans to rescind them.

Yet the message from Mr Denton, a supporter of voluntary euthanasia, says the new laws are at risk.

‘‘ This is about a personal and important issue,’’ he says in a recorded message. ‘‘ Victoria has Australia’s only voluntary assisted-dying law. That means people who are dying don’t have to endure intolerable suffering at the end of their lives. This election, only support candidates that back these laws.’’

The phone calls will go out to voters this week. The messages also offer a prompt for callers to connect to their local MP to voice their views on the issue.

Voluntary euthanasia lobby group Dying With Dignity also has raised concerns about how the assisteddying legislation will be implemented if the Coalition wins.

The group has run an online advertising campaign to pressure MPs into promising they will not obstruct the laws once they are introduced.

But on Sunday Mr Guy told reporters that Dying With Dignity had been running a ‘‘ highly misleading’ ’ campaign against him. He said the vote in Parliament was ‘‘ the conclusion to the matter in my eyes’’ .

Mr Guy said opposition health spokeswoman Mary Wooldridge would be responsible for implementing the scheme if the Coalition wins the election.

‘‘ I’m not going to intervene in the health minister’s portfolio. That will be a job for her to work out,’’ he said.

The euthanasia laws are due to come into effect in June 2019.

Labor holds two electorates that will receive the robocalls – Bentleigh and Albert Park – where the sitting MPs both supported voluntary euthanasia , while the Greens MP in Prahran also voted in favour.

But Graham Watt, the Liberal MP for Burwood, was a vocal opponent.

Source: The Age Digital Edition: Denton to robocall voters to stop euthanasia reverse
By Benjamin Preiss
19 November 2018

]]>Euthanasia 24-hour Hotlinehttps://www.myrighttodie.com/news/euthanasia-24-hour-hotline
Sun, 04 Nov 2018 02:13:53 +0000https://www.myrighttodie.com/?p=382Read More...]]>TERMINALLY ill patients will be able to get information on euthanasia from a 24-hour Victorian state government-sponsored hotline.

The $6 million palliative care support line will also provide help and advice on end of-life care.

But a government tender document reveals the winning provider must be willing to provide information on the assisted dying scheme.

The government wants the hotline — staffed by doctors and nurses — to begin after euthanasia becomes legal in Victoria next June. It is expecting 45,000 callers in its first year.

Palliative Care Victoria chief executive Odette Waanders said it was important the advice line didn’t create confusion between assisted dying and palliative care. She slammed the Labor government’s record of palliative care funding, and said an advice line did little to address the gap.

A Department of Health and Human Services spokesman said the hotline would be a reliable 24-hour source for end-of-life information. He said it would provide advice on voluntary assisted dying only when prompted by the caller.

In an exclusive interview with 60 Minutes reporter Tara Brown, West Australian based GP Alida Lancee is putting her reputation, her livelihood and – most importantly – her freedom on the line by identifying the patient who requested her help in assisted dying.

The never-before-made admission will most likely spark a police investigation and a possible murder charge.

‘The Confession’ airs this Sunday (23/9/2018) on Channel 9 following The Block.

“I’m not wimping out now. I’m going to take this all the way,” she tells Brown, in a preview for tonight’s report.

“Deal with me as you see fit.”

Dr Lancee, a long-time campaigner for euthanasia, was investigated by police in 2016 over the death of one of her patients.

The investigation established that Dr Lancee’s patient had died naturally and that no wrongdoing was found.

But what police didn’t realise is that they were investigating the wrong patient.

Now, Dr Lancee has decided to set the record straight once and for all, in a brave bid to change Australia’s euthanasia laws.

“Right now, behind closed doors in Australia, hundreds of people are begging for help,” she tells Brown.

“This is no minor issue. This is not something that you can just say, ‘Oh, it’s not happening ’cause I can’t see it’.”

“If this requires a challenge in the court system, I have medical opinions who will back me up.”

The police investigation has seen Dr Lancee face very public scrutiny being labelled “Dr Death”, but as Brown reveals, she is not without support.

In an incredibly risky move, two additional Australian doctors have come forward to 60 Minutes and admitted to assisting terminally ill patients end their life.

Dr Frank Kotai tells Brown he has assisted in half a dozen deaths.

And Dr Rodney Syme admits to a staggering 300.

It’s an admission that could land them in jail, but one they say is worth the risk if it results in their patients having control over the end of their lives.

“We recognise her courage and her enthusiasm,” Dr Kotai says.

“(Dr Lancee is) courageous enough to go out there in the public space.

“Not many doctors are willing to do it, and so she’s quite unique.”

In June 2019 new laws will make Victoria the only state in Australia where it is legal for doctors to assist terminal patients who seek their help to end their lives.

Dr Lancee, Dr Kotai and Dr Syme are hopeful that by airing their stories, Australians will support them in their campaign to allowing for an end of life choice.

Hearing from not only the doctors, Australians will see firsthand the perspectives of terminally ill patients and their families – those who have lost loved ones and been in the position of begging their doctors to assist.

Victoria’s health department head will have three days to decide whether to sign off on each bid for voluntary euthanasia when the practice becomes legal in nine months (June 2019).

Euthanasia drugs will also have to be kept in a steel box with a label affixed warning “this substance will cause death” .

The rules were announced this week through a new set of regulations that answer some of the remaining questions about how Victoria’s assisted dying laws will be overseen.

It is understood work is under way that would allow the state government to import lethal medications used elsewhere in the world.

They could include pentobarbital (better known as Nembutal) and another barbiturate sedative known as secobarbital, which are banned for human use in Australia.

A Therapeutic Goods Administration spokeswoman said while it was an offence to supply therapeutic goods for human use if they are not registered, there were exemptions .

Health Minister Jill Hennessy said the regulations introduced on Tuesday meant all laws were now in place to make voluntary assisted dying available to patients.

“We’ve established the safest and most conservative scheme in the world, with the most stringent checks and balances,” she said.

Come June 19 next year, Victorians will be able to access assistance to end their lives if they have been diagnosed with a disease that is expected to cause their death within six months.

They will need to have been deemed eligible by two medical practitioners and have made two separate requests for access, including one in writing.

A permit will be granted or refused by the health department secretary (or another senior public servant) within three business days, but possibly earlier if the patient is very sick.

The secretary will have six documents to help them make the decision , including details of the person’s disease and diagnosis, a declaration they have decisionmaking capacity and the details of a contact person who will be tasked with disposing of any unused euthanasia drug.

In the first year of operation it’s expected only a few dozen people will apply for a permit, but this could increase to one person every two or three days in subsequent years as more people become familiar with the laws.

In exceptional circumstances, where a person is expected to die imminently, the entire process from initial request for euthanasia to death could be completed within just a couple of days.

Otherwise, at least nine days must elapse between the first and final request for voluntary assisted dying.

Earlier this month, Western Health, which runs Footscray and Sunshine hospitals, became the first Victorian health service to confirm that it would allow its doctors and staff to assist in legal euthanasia , if they were willing.

We’ve established the safest and most conservative scheme in the world.’

Health Minister Jill Hennessy

Source

The Age Digital Edition: Euthanasia rules set as start date nears

This article is from the September 27, 2018 issue of The Age Digital Edition

Aisha Dow

]]>Dying with Dignity NSW Campaignhttps://www.myrighttodie.com/campaigns/dying-with-dignity-nsw-campaign
Tue, 28 Aug 2018 00:00:36 +0000https://www.myrighttodie.com/?p=377Read More...]]>Dying with Dignity NSW is a not-for-profit, advocacy organisation who have been campaigning for the legalisation of voluntary assisted dying for decades.

It would like to see a law introduced in NSW that would enable competent adults experiencing unbelievable suffering from a terminal or incurable illness to receive medical assistance to end their life peacefully, at a time of their choosing.

Dying with Dignity NSW

Show your support for the right of mentally competent adults with unrelievable suffering from terminal or incurable illnesses to choose an assisted death.

To learn more about this issue of assisted dying, join the campaign or read other personal stories like Scott Riddle’s, visit their website at – https://dwdnsw.org.au/

Source

Dying with Dignity campaign

]]>Bill To Legalise Assisted Dying Across Australiahttps://www.myrighttodie.com/news/assisted-dying-legalised-across-australia
Wed, 15 Aug 2018 00:00:49 +0000https://www.myrighttodie.com/?p=362Read More...]]>A private member’s bill that would clear the way for assisted dying to be legalised across Australia could be passed in the Senate this week, but may not be granted the lower house vote needed to pass into law.

Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull , who is under pressure from conservatives within the Coalition, has refused to say whether he will bring forward the bill for debate – and a conscience vote – in the House of Representatives.

Liberal Democratic Party senator David Leyonhjelm says he is confident his private member’s bill will pass the Senate, where it is due to be debated over three days starting today . Senator Leyonhjelm has accused Mr Turnbull of reneging on a promise to guarantee his bill will be subject to a free vote in both houses of Parliament, and has threatened to block government bills in the Senate in response.

His bill, if passed, will enable the ACT and Northern Territory to make their own laws on voluntary assisted dying, which became legal in Victoria last year.

At least 38 of the 76 senators are expected to vote in favour of the bill, which is subject to a conscience vote on both sides of the Senate, after Mr Turnbull struck a deal with Senator Leyonhjelm to secure the passage of legislation that re-established the Australian Building and Construction Commission.

‘‘ It’s quite an important piece of legislation because it will restore to the Northern Territory and the ACT the right to legislate on a very serious social issue on the same basis the states can legislate on the issue,’’ Senator Leyonhjelm said. ‘‘ If it passes the Senate – as I said, I expect it will be the case – I want it to go into the House where it will be debated on the same basis, a conscience-vote basis … I did have a deal with the Prime Minister to allow that to occur . It looks like he’s not enthusiastic about acknowledging that deal at the moment.’’

The Northern Territory became the first Australian jurisdiction to legalise voluntary euthanasia in 1996, but the federal government overrode the territory law in 1997 through a bill introduced by Liberal backbencher Kevin Andrews.

ACT Chief Minister Andrew Barr has written to federal MPs and senators calling on them to support the bill, deeming the current arrangement ‘‘ fundamentally antidemocratic’’ . The ACT government took out a full-page ad in The Australian newspaper yesterday, urging legislators to support the bill.

Former NT chief minister Marshall Perron, who championed the territory’s 1996 law, said the 160,000 Australians who happened to live in the territories should have the right for their elected representatives to make laws on their behalf.

Mr Turnbull did not respond to a request for comment.

‘I want it to go into the House.

David Leyonhjelm

Source

The Age Digital Edition: Leyonhjelm confident over assisted dying bill

Assisted dying bill defeated in the Senate

A private member’s bill that would have cleared the way for assisted dying to be legalised across Australia has been defeated.

The bill, introduced by Liberal Democrat senator David Leyonhjelm , was defeated by 36 to 34 votes after two days of impassioned debate in the Senate.

It was knocked down after Liberal senator Anne Ruston and Nationals senator Steve Martin were persuaded to vote against it, having initially leaned in favour of it.

“I cannot in good conscience offer my support to this bill, which will provide the territories the ability to legislate in the area of voluntary euthanasia , certainly without ensuring that appropriate safeguards were in place,” Senator Martin said yesterday .

Senator Leyonhjelm said he was disappointed by the bill’s defeat, vowing to continue fighting for ‘‘ the rights of all Australians to decide how and when to end their lives’’ .

“It was deeply frustrating to hear so many senators argue against my bill in the misguided belief it would somehow impact negatively on the provision of first-class palliative care for the terminally ill,’’ he said last night.

‘‘ All Australians, no matter where they live, have the right to decide for themselves when it comes to end-oflife treatment.’’

Politicians from both sides of politics rose to share divergent views, with many in support of the bill emphasising the rights of Australians in the territories to make their own laws.

The bill proposed overturning a federal law that removed the rights of the ACT and Northern Territory to legislate on euthanasia, enacted in 1997 after the NT government briefly legalised assisted dying.

Labor senator Pat Dodson, opposing the bill, argued that ‘‘ paving the way for euthanasia and assisted suicide’ ’ would leave Indigenous Australians ‘‘ even more vulnerable, when our focus should be on working collectively to create laws that help prolong life and restore their right to enjoy a healthy life’’ .

Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull came under intense pressure from conservatives to ensure the bill would not get a vote in the lower house.

The issue remains a live one despite the bill’s defeat, with ACT Labor MPs Andrew Leigh and Luke Gosling , who have opposing views on voluntary euthanasia, drafting their own private members’ bill to allow the territories to make their own laws on the matter.

Television host Andrew Denton had pledged to lobby Mr Turnbull to secure a lower house vote if Senator Leyonhjelm’s bill passed in the Senate.

Former Australian Medical Association president Brian Owler, Denton’s co-director of advocacy group Go Gentle Australia, said support for the legalisation of assisted dying consistently polled at higher than 80 per cent.

‘‘ This is one of those issues where, unfortunately, a number of parliaments around the country seem to be out of step with community expectations ,’’ he said.

]]>Voluntary Euthanasia Panelhttps://www.myrighttodie.com/news/voluntary-euthanasia-panel
Sat, 30 Jun 2018 01:30:30 +0000https://www.myrighttodie.com/?p=352Read More...]]>It has been announced that a panel will oversee each application to regulate Victoria’s voluntary euthanasia laws.

The laws allow terminally ill Victorians with less than six months to live, the right to end their lives.

The article below is from the June 30, 2018 issue of The Age Digital Edition.

Panel to study every euthanasia request

A panel of eminent Victorians will oversee every application for voluntary euthanasia to ensure that people requesting access to a lethal drug are not “under duress” or being influenced by a psychiatric disorder.

Respected former Supreme Court judge Betty King, QC, who presided over cases involving Carl Williams and his gangland associates, will today be announced as the inaugural chair of the voluntary assisted dying review board.

Ms King will be joined by 13 health and legal experts, including intensive care specialist Dr Charlie Corke and media personality Dr Sally Cockburn.

Health Minister Jill Hennessy said the board would have a year to prepare for the arrival of the voluntary euthanasia laws, which will allow some terminally ill Victorians with less than six months to live the right to end their lives.

“They will be looking to ensure that the medical assessments of people have been done correctly and lawfully,” Ms Hennessy said.

“We have very strict regulation around ensuring that people meet some of the threshold illnesses set out in the law.

“That is that you are … suffering from a terminal illness, that you have capacity to make decisions, that you are not suffering from the effects of psychiatric illness that might be affecting your decision, and that there is no evidence of duress.”

The review board would monitor data from voluntary euthanasia cases, seeking to identify anyone trying to evade the law, Ms Hennessy said. It will have the power to refer cases to the police, the coroner and the Australian Health Practitioner Regulation Agency.

Voluntary euthanasia will be legalised in Victoria from June 19 next year, allowing adults who are suffering intolerably and have less than six months to live to access a fatal substance.

What that substance will be has yet to be decided. It’s understood the Victorian government is seeking advice from the Therapeutic Goods Administration on whether it’s possible to legalise euthanasia dug pentobarbitone (Nembutal) or anaesthetic secobarbital.

Two doctors will have to conduct favourable assessments of a person’s eligibility for euthanasia, and a person has to make three separate requests to end their life, after initiating the process. Doctors and other health workers will be able to conscientiously object to participating.

It has been estimated that about 150 to 200 Victorians could make use of future euthanasia laws each year.

Before the change, an implementation taskforce has been working to finalise crucial elements of the euthanasia framework, including the best formulation of a lethal medication.

It is also developing training for doctors willing to be involved in euthanasia, clinical guidelines and information to be distributed to the public explaining how the new laws will operate.

The chairman of the taskforce, lawyer Julian Gardner, a former Victorian public advocate, said the work would need to be completed by March.

“The training that is required under the act for the two accessing doctors needs to be out there well in advance so some people can undertake it,” he said.

“So there’s a bit of time pressure on.”

Ms Hennessy said she continued to receive weekly correspondence from people desperate for voluntary euthanasia to be introduced in Victoria.

“It’s a matter of great sadness for me that for many of those cases, this law will not be in effect in time to provide them with the sort of relief they are seeking,” she said.

]]>Law Change: Victorians Can Refuse Medical Treatmenthttps://www.myrighttodie.com/news/law-change-victorians-can-refuse-medical-treatment
Sun, 06 May 2018 06:47:01 +0000https://www.myrighttodie.com/?p=347Read More...]]>Victorians now have the power to refuse medical treatment.

New laws that came into effect in March 2018 mean families can no longer overturn such instructions.

As reported in the March 19, 2018 issue of The Age Digital Edition.

New laws to give patients control of own destiny

Victorians, including those with dementia , now have the power to refuse medical treatment or resuscitation even after they lose consciousness or forget who they are.

New laws that quietly came into effect last week mean families can no longer overturn such instructions, as has happened in the past.

The laws aim to give people more power over what happens to them when they are ill and can no longer communicate their wishes.

The introduction of the Medical Treatment Planning and Decisions Act 2016 means people with dementia still can have a say about how they are treated, long after their memory starts to fail. For example, if you can no longer swallow do you want to be fed through your stomach ? And if you get pneumonia do you want to be aggressively treated?

People can also leave instructions asking they receive treatment in certain circumstances, such as a young person with a severe disability who wants to make it clear they do want to be resuscitated to save their life.

Significantly , new “instructional directives” providing instructions about the treatments a person consents to or refuses will not be able to be overruled by family members.

“People might have concerns that their family will disagree with their wishes for end-of-life care, and the act addresses this,” said Acting Health Minister Martin Foley.

He said people of any age with decision-making capacity could make a legally binding advanced care directive, which would need to be witnessed by two people, including a medical practitioner (in the case of children, a doctor with expertise in capacity in children).

Anyone who is found to have coerced someone into making an advanced care directive could face up to five years in prison.

Rosa Bazzanella, a will and estates specialist with Rigby Cooke Lawyers , said doctors who ignored directives could also face disciplinary proceedings. “If they are aware of an advanced care directive and ignore it, it’s professional misconduct, even if it is an emergency,” she said.

“The only time they’re going to get off, is if they act in good faith at a time when they’re under pressure, and they have to act to save a life.”

Also included in the new laws are values directives, where people can describe what is important in their life, including their religious beliefs.

“It can be really idiosyncratic what people do and don’t want,” said Odette Waanders, CEO of Palliative Care Victoria. “Some people will say ‘If I can eat ice-cream and watch TV you can do anything to me’ ,” she said. “Others will say ‘unless I can feed myself I’m not interested’ .

“The values directive is a really valuable tool, so that people are not suddenly in the crisis situation not knowing what you would want.”

Victorians will also not be able to make a legally binding request to donate their organs.

‘It can be really idiosyncratic what people … want.’

This article is from the March 19 issue of The Age Digital Edition. To subscribe, visit https://theage.digitaleditions.com.au/.

Aisha Dow | Health reporter

Pain of dying is loss of control of one’s destiny

I’m now in my 80s, in the evening of life but still of sound mind, a retired doctor having seen many die, a former Catholic priest having sent many on their way.

My view on the right to die at a time of one’s own choosing is imposed on no one; on the other hand, the view of those opposed to euthanasia is imposed on everyone – that is the injustice (”Reject euthanasia and save us from Dr Death”, Comment, 12/5).

Dying is a lonely event, eased but not shared by those who love us.

The real pain of dying is not the physical pain, which can be easily relieved; it is the pain of irretrievable loss of dignity, of control over one’s destiny, bodily functions and independence.

It is the pain of fading memories, the pain of waiting with the realisation that one day we will be no more than a name on a family tree. These things can never be relieved by palliative care. My life is my own and I wish for the freedom to die with dignity when I decide, surrounded by those who love me and within the constraints of a law framed to shield me in that dying hour.

]]>Euthanasia Legal in Victoria from 2019https://www.myrighttodie.com/news/euthanasia-legal
Thu, 30 Nov 2017 07:51:22 +0000http://www.myrighttodie.com/?p=338Read More...]]>Terminally ill Victorians will be able to legally end their own lives after State Parliament passed the government’s voluntary assisted dying bill in November 2017.

After more than 100 hours of debate , the bill had a low-key final passage through the lower house just before midday.

But the government has acknowledged that people with painful terminal illnesses will be disappointed that the laws will not come into force until 2019.

The legislation calls for an 18-month ‘‘ implementation period’ ’ to finalise outstanding details and the exact nature of the lethal drugs that will be used.

‘‘ I know this is a disappointment to some people who have a terminal illness,’’ Health Minister Jill Hennessy said after yesterday’s vote.

‘‘ But the bill does require an 18-month implementation period.

‘‘ We have been very dedicated to the task of developing this bill and we’re going to be equally dedicated to the task of getting a safe, sensible and robust system in place.’’

Ms Hennessy said the technical work on making voluntary euthanasia a reality in Victoria ‘‘ starts tomorrow’’ .

‘‘ We will be establishing an implementation panel that will have the necessary expertise to start to develop what this model will look like, the clinical training issues, engagement with the medical workforce, as well as implementing all of the other issues that were contained in the Ministerial Advisory Panel report,’’ the minister said.

There has been sometimes bitter division within the medical establishment during Victoria’s debate.

But the Victorian branch of the Australian Nursing and Midwifery Federation was quick to welcome the decision on Wednesday.

‘‘ Under this law, terminally-ill Victorians who make a voluntary assisted dying request will have more access to palliative care options and further specialist review of their illness or condition and their choice will be covered by a safe legal framework,’’ branch secretary Lisa Fitzpatrick said. ‘‘ Importantly people will talk more to their doctors about the dying process.

‘‘ This has been a difficult ethical debate and while the majority of our members support terminally-ill Victorians ’ right to choose voluntary assisted dying, those who don’t will be able to conscientiously object to any involvement.’’

Catholic Archbishop of Melbourne Denis Hart described the passage of the laws as ‘‘ deeply regrettable and most disappointing’’ .

‘‘ Catholic health and aged care providers will continue to accompany those who face death, always striving to provide the best care to them and their loved ones,’’ Dr Hart said. ‘‘ Assisted suicide and euthanasia are not part of their practise and are incompatible with the provision of quality palliative care.

‘‘ The Archdiocese will strongly advocate that the Victorian government honours its promise of increased palliative care, particularly in regional areas.’’

The government ovecame a last stand on Tuesday evening and Wednesday by opponents who would not to let the bill pass without a fight .

Substantial amendments had been agreed to overcome opposition in the upper house two weeks ago, including lowering the proposed lifeexpectancy threshold from 12 months to six and committing more money to palliative care.

But a last-ditch effort in the lower house by Liberal frontbencher Robert Clark to put the bill on hold indefinitely had to be defeated by 44 votes to 37 on Wednesday morning before the final vote could go ahead.

]]>Nembutalhttps://www.myrighttodie.com/information/nembutal
Wed, 15 Nov 2017 00:00:40 +0000http://www.myrighttodie.com/?p=82Read More...]]>Pentobarbital is in a group of drugs called barbiturates. Pentobarbital slows the activity of your brain and nervous system.

Pentobarbital is used short-term to treat insomnia. Pentobarbital is also used as an emergency treatment for seizures, and to cause you to fall asleep for surgery.

One brand name for this drug is Nembutal, best known as the only injectable form of pentobarbital used for executions of convicted criminals (USA) and for euthanasia of humans (high dose) and animals.

Hundreds risk jail to import illegal drug

Nembutal drug promoted by euthanasia campaigners as a peaceful way to die is easily being illegally imported into Australia.

Known as the “peaceful pill”, barbiturate Nembutal is promoted by the euthanasia movement as the best and most peaceful way to end your life.

Most have bought the illicit drug online from China, a country that has come to dominate the market.

The drug kills within an hour of being consumed.

“There are very few lethal drugs and the best lethal drug is Nembutal,” euthanasia advocate Dr Philip Nitschke told a recent workshop.

“I’ve been with a lot of people who have died using this drug, it just seemed to get into to a deeper and deeper sleep and then finally stop breathing.

“And for those watching they see this as the most peaceful of deaths, it certainly looks to be.

“Be careful, because it’s illegal.”

The penalty for importing or possessing Nembutal is a prison sentence or a fine of up to $825,000.

Purchasing Nembutal Online

In Australia, it is illegal (import or possess) to purchase any form of Nembutal.

There are many reports of internet scams from Australian’s who have lost hundreds of dollars trying to buy Nembutal online.

There are also major concerns about the quality of product coming from countries like China and Mexico.

Peaceful Pill

Members of Peaceful Pill Handbook can access information about purchasing Nembutal online and strategies to help keep you safe.